![]() It's just that in this case they were blended physically as well. The melders aren't "dead" once that happens, just blended. Think of it like a mind meld, when two personalities are so blended they function as one being. ![]() I just think it's a gross oversimplification to think that Tuvok and Neelix were in any way "dead." Tuvix was not a completely separate person he was both of them at once. I'm just saying that, in my attempts to reason out what Janeway's decision process must have been and why she made the choice she did, this is my best estimation. But in the exceptional circumstances of Voyager's situation, with a crew that might have to spend the rest of their lives together and didn't have the luxury of transfers and crew replacements to deal with interpersonal tensions, even such a subtle seed of mistrust could fester and grow over time.Īnd again, I'm not saying this is what I believe. It doesn't have to be a huge degree of doubt it could be a very subtle, back-of-the-mind sort of thing. Tuvix's actions would've created doubt in the crew's minds about whether he was capable of that. ![]() These people had to believe they could trust one another with their lives, had to know their crewmates would put their own lives on the line for their benefit. It's about trust, an absolutely vital commodity in any team. Click to expand.As I said, it's not about who's there and who's gone. ![]()
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